SHERWIN-WILLIAMS COMPANY, Petitioner, v. AMERICAN INDEMNITY COMPANY, Respondent.
No. B-3944.
Supreme Court of Texas.
Dec. 31, 1973.
Rehearing Denied Feb. 13, 1974.
504 S.W.2d 400
Harold F. Curtis, Jr., Greenville, for respondent.
MCGEE, Justice.
This suit was filed by Petitioner, Sherwin-Williams Company against Ken Row Apartments, the owner, Bobby Rogers, the painting subcontractor, and Rowton Construction Company, the original contractor, to recover for painting materials and supplies furnished to Rogers and to Rowton, for attorney fees, and for foreclosure of a materialman‘s lien on an apartment project. By amended original petition Petitioner later joined Respondent, named as surety on a bond of which Rowton was principal. The trial court granted Respondent‘s motion for summary judgment, unsupported by summary judgment proof, on the ground that Hardeman Act limitations,
The judgments of the courts below are predicated upon the theory that the bond incorporated the Hardeman Act limitation period. The Petitioner joined Respondent within the two-year period specified in the bond. Respondent‘s joinder, however, was untimely if Hardeman Act limitations of fourteen months control. We hold that the bond in question is not a Hardeman Act bond, and that the two-year contractual limitation period controls.
The bond involved was in the sum of $400,000. It was executed in conjunction with a cost-plus construction contract between Ken Row Apartments and Rowton Construction Co., Inc., by Kenneth Rowton, President, to build apartments at a recited cost of $957,435. Named as obligees were Ken Row Apartments as owner and Dallas Federal Savings & Loan Association as lender. The bond is not the type of Hardeman Act bond approved by this Court in Fidelity & Deposit Company of Maryland v. Felker, 469 S.W.2d 389, 392 (Tex. 1971), or Trinity Universal Insurance Company v. Barlite, Inc., 435 S.W.2d 849, 851-852 (Tex. 1968). Instead, this bond purports to protect the secured lender in the event of default by the principal, as follows:
“WHEREAS, Lender has agreed to lend to Owner-Obligee a sum of money to be secured by a mortgage on said project and to be used in making payments under said Contract, and desires protection as its interests may appear, in event of default by Principal under said Contract, said protection to be subject to the performance by the Obligees, or either of them, of the obligations to Principal in connection with said Contract.
“NOW, THEREFORE, the condition of this obligation is such that, if Principal shall well and truly perform all the undertakings, covenants, terms, conditions and agreements of said Contract on its part, and fully indemnify and save harmless Obligees from all cost and damage which they may suffer by reason of failure so to do, and fully reimburse and repay Obligees all outlay and expense which Obligees may incur in making good any such default, and further, that if Principal shall pay all persons who have contracts directly with Principal for labor or materials furnished pursuant to the provisions of said Contract, failing which such persons shall have a di-
rect right of action against Principal and Surety under this obligation, subject to Obligees’ priority, then this obligation shall be null and void; otherwise it shall remain in full force and effect.” [Emphasis added].
A contractual limitation of two years from the day on which final payment under the contract falls due is provided. The aggregate liability of the surety is limited to the face of the bond ($400,000). The bond concludes, “6. The parties execute this bond with the intent to comply with the Hardeman Act, Art. 5472d, T.R.C.S.”
Subsection 1 of
We hold notwithstanding paragraph six of the bond that it fails to qualify as a Hardeman Act bond. Although the bond executed by Rowton as principal does not purport to give even half the coverage required by subsection 1, the surety argues the Hardeman Act limitations and removal of the owner‘s property as security should nevertheless be applicable. We disagree. The Petitioner alleges that it supplied materials directly to Rowton; it therefore appears that Petitioner is a subsidiary obligee of the bond, having a direct cause of action against the surety. Fireman‘s Fund Ins. Co. v. Abilene Livestock Auction Co., 391 S.W.2d 147 (Tex.Civ.App.-Dallas 1965, writ ref‘d n.r.e.). Since Petitioner joined the Respondent within the limitation period of the bond, it was error to grant Respondent‘s motion for summary judgment.
Respondent argues that a holding that the Hardeman Act limitations period does not apply in the instant case is prevented by the language of
“8. Any bond which is either furnished and filed in attempted compliance with this Article or which by its express terms evidences its intent to comply with this Article shall in either event be construed to effectuate such intention and all rights and remedies on such bond shall be enforceable in the same manner and under the same conditions and limitations as the bond provided for in this Article.”
Respondent argues that the statement of intent to comply with the Hardeman Act contained in the bond shows both an express intent to comply with the Act and, together with a file mark on the bond, that it was furnished and filed in attempted compliance with the Article. Although the words of the statute literally permit such a construction, we are unwilling to construe those words to frustrate the legislature‘s presumed intent to provide full payment to laborers, subcontractors and materialmen under a bond in lieu of an action against the owner and his property. We do not consider that the legislature intended to permit a single statement of intent to overcome the obvious inadequacy of protection as compared to the requirements of the Act. The substantial defect in amount of the express terms of the Rowton bond conclusively rebuts any argument that the bond was furnished and filed in attempted compliance with the Hardeman Act, or that there was any intent to comply with the requirements of the Act. We find no authority authorizing a court to more than double the penal sum to make it comply with subsection 1 of
Although we can construe subsection 8 as permitting modification of a non-conforming bond to include parties not named in the bond, or to realign priorities between obligees of the bond to comport with the statutory scheme, we do not view it as permitting increasing the penal sum to the amount here involved.
The judgments of the trial court and the court of civil appeals are reversed, and the cause is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Dissenting opinion by WALKER, J., in which GREENHILL, C. J., joins.
WALKER, Justice (dissenting).
I respectfully dissent. Paragraph 6 of the bond in the present case provides:
6. The parties execute this bond with the intent to comply with the Hardeman Act, Article 5472d, T.R.C.S.
The specifications set out in Section 8 of
The principle declared by Section 8 is not strange to our law. For many years the courts have been holding, without the aid of a legislative directive, that a statute which provides for the giving of a bond becomes a part of the bond. See 12 Am.
The bond in the present case satisfies every essential requirement of Section 8. In my opinion we should obey the plain statutory mandate and hold that all rights and remedies of the parties are governed by the provisions of
GREENHILL, C. J., joins in this dissent.
See also Tex.Civ.App., 496 S.W.2d 673.
